Jetblue

INTRODUCTION

JetBlue Airways entered the market in 2000 from a position of financial strength, leadership capability and several rare advantage points uncommon to others in the industry:  1)  David Neeleman, the founder, had several years of industry experience as a result of having successfully launched and sold an airline (Morris Air), bringing both explicit and tacit knowledge into the his new venture; 2)  Neeleman was afforded the opportunity to work directly with his idol, Herb Kelleher, at Southwest Airlines (the king of the low-cost leaders) after Southwest purchased Morris Air from Neeleman; and 3)  Substantial financial support from venture capitalists who had funded Neeleman's previous ventures and were more than willing to support and capitalize on his idea for a new low-cost passenger airline.
With a clear mission and vision, he implemented a low-cost, differentiation business-level strategy, that set out to position JetBlue as the leading low-cost passenger airline in the industry, differentiating on high-quality customer service, providing customers with a geographically diversified flight schedule of both short and long hauls, along with efficient and reliable service.
JetBlue's mission is "to bring humanity back to air travel".  Its low-cost strategy is second-to-none, not even to Southwest.  Utilizing Southwest as a model and benchmark early in Neeleman's career in the industry, he's managed to copy the Southwest model and expand upon it with his ability to find more innovative ways to cut costs along the organization's value-chain, while utilizing technology to increase productivity and further add to operational efficiencies.  JetBlue's value chain demonstrates its ability to successfully compete in seve ...
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